Recently, Rolling Stone Magazine, published a report they entitled, "The Kill Team". The subtitle says it all, "How U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan murdered innocent civilians and mutilated their corpses – and how their officers failed to stop them. Plus: An exclusive look at the war crime photos censored by the Pentagon". After reading this article and a few of the endless responses both for and against, I just had to put my two cents into what is turning out to be a three ring circus.Many, including the US Army, have objected to Rolling Stone publishing the photos they obtained from an unnamed source. Though these images are extremely graphic and publishing them might be in bad taste, in some opinions, there is nothing illegal or anything that might pose a direct threat to US forces. Some might say it will enrage the Afghan people, I'm not sure how many Afghan local nationals subscribe to Rolling Stone or have access to reports on this article and even if they had, our reputation in the Middle East and Southwest Asia is what you might call cordial, I do not believe that this would suddenly push the local populace over the edge, they have many other reasons to feel anger and bitterness towards our nation's policy. That being said, one quote from the article really sets the tone for the rest of it, "The photos, obtained by Rolling Stone, portray a front-line culture among U.S. troops in which killing Afghan civilians is less a reason for concern than a cause for celebration." The fact that the author of this piece maintains that this incident represents the "front-line" culture of all deployed service members is appalling. What these men did was an atrocity, no doubt about it, but to label all combat arms as psychopathic killers is an atrocity in its own right. There are thousands of courageous and professional men and women currently serving on the front lines in Iraq, Afghanistan and many other places that would turn the toughest of the tough into crying toddlers. All of this points to a very real dilemma our nation has shut its eyes to, why do men, seemingly ordinary, do the things they do in combat. How are these men and women able to handle the stress and incalculable mental trauma that is associated with real combat? Training and desensitization. From the beginning of every military man or woman's career, all the way back to Basic Training, it is engrained in our head, to dehumanize the enemy. It makes it easier to kill, it takes away the humanity and detaches the soldier from what this nation and her citizens are asking its military men and women to do, kill in the name of _______ (add freedom cliché here). We all remember the chant we are all taught, combat arms or not, "What makes the green grass grow?! Blood, Blood, Bright Red Blood!!" Seems harmless enough, right? No real purpose for it, but to motivate, right? Is it?Think about it. When we join the Army, our primary MOS is always what? Rifleman. We are trained killers, some more intensely than others and in order to ensure those who are combat arms, those who’s primary and secondary MOS is killing, they, for lack of a better word, brain wash these men to desensitize the enemy, to look at them as targets, as pop-ups on the range. Then, after engraining this in their heads, deploying them multiple times and putting some questionable barely out of adolescence men in unimaginable situations, the brass at the Pentagon is stumped when a few of their trained killer pit-bulls break the chain and start killing those who they have been trained to consider less than human. There is nothing strange about it except that there are not MORE of these scenarios playing out on the world stage that America polices. This, by no means, is an excuse for their behavior, but more of an explanation. They are trained to kill, many of them are seriously unstable as it is, and then they are given weapons, faulty leadership and these "killers" do what has now become natural for them, they kill. For a conventional war, this was not such an issue, but we are no longer soldiers, we are policy ambassadors and training a man to kill and then placing him in a position to where he must use his mind to further the policy of the State Department and expecting favorable results is madness. They are not trained embassy workers, professional ambassadors, their training is to find the enemy, kill the enemy, go home. In other words, why would you put the Pitbulls you have trained to kill inside the chicken coop? Furthermore, you then question their behavior when they act on their instincts? Innocents or not, they are trained to kill not to police, don't put pitbulls in with the chickens.

I believe this speaks volumes about the outdated training for our Infantrymen as well as the lack of, or continued stigma towards, mental healthcare. Regardless of what they may say at the Pentagon, going to the PA or shrink to discuss "feelings" is not accepted at the Unit level and these soldiers know it, they suck it up and then the wounds on the inside eat away at their very soul, and killing becomes less a necessary evil that is only committed when there is no other way, to a rush that needs satisfying. We need to be asking different questions to different people. We need to ask ourselves whether we could put ourselves in their shoes before we judge these men. We need to question the authority behind these men, all the way up to Washington. Our nation, our civilization will be judged by the way we treat our warfighters. How will we be judged now?Always Forward!Jaeson "Doc" Parsons

Doc - I totally agree with you. My fiance is a Marine sniper who served 5 tours in Iraq and Afghanistan before he was shot several times in an ambush. Who shot him? A child who he had given a lollipop to earlier in the day. Unless we personally have been there beside them and gone through what they have gone through, we can never truly understand the atrocities that our own men and women serving have witnessed, how it affects them both short and long term. For instance, my fiance recently found out what actually happened to his "brother" - his sniper scout. Insurgents had captured him as a POW for over a year until they killed him by decapitating him...his body was found headless, his head was never recovered. Now imagine being witness to this happening to your "brothers" and "sisters" who you have formed tight bonds with through the stresses of war relying on each other for your lives. Some of us have seen videos of the torture and brutal killings of our own soldiers (me not being one, there is no way I could stomach that). Imagine seeing that, dealing with that, day in and day out. Seeing how your enemy doesn't respect your family, how they slaughter them, how they treat their bodies. From a psychological standpoint, you cannot expect to immerse someone into a highly stressful, violent, unpredictable environment for an extended period of time and expect it to NOT result in extreme desensitization to violence until some finally snap and turn into "killing machines" which is exactly what they were trained to do. This is unconventional guerilla war, where you never know where the next threat or attack is coming from, or from who - even from a mother and her child.

Reply

Doc

4/8/2011 08:21:45 pm

Diane,

Very well put and exactly what those at Rolling Stone Magazine and most of the civilian population will never, thankfully, understand. Please pass along our thanks to your fiance for his service to a grateful nation.

This might not be the ideal place to request this, but I’m trying to find a Chicken Coop designs online and have no method to find out who is the very best. I uncovered this website which is I find reliable and wanted to see if any person has any reviews on them. SDS CAD. http://chickencooppictures.com
Please help me with this as my wife and I have been struggling to find a good/reliable site to obtain Chicken Coop designs.

Reply

Leave a Reply.

Never Miss An UpdateSubscribe Today!

Jaeson "Doc" Parsons

Founder and CEO of The Graffiti of War Project, Doc is a decorated combat veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom where he was a combat medic with the 54th Engineer Battalion. He is currently the a journalist for Force 12 Media and is featured weekly on SOFREP.com. Docas been featured in numerous media outlets such as Wired.com, Maxim.com and BusinessInsider.com. For more information about Jaeson "Doc" Parsons click HERE or send him an EMAIL.